Macquarie Harbour Mr. Ghould's Report

Macquarie Harbour Mr. Ghould's Report

(No. 20.), 18 62. TASMAN I A. M A.C Q UAR I E HARB O U Ro MR. G O U L D'S R E P O R T. Laid on the Table by Mr. Benty, and ordered by the Council to be printed, 31 July, 1862. Srn, IN enclosing the accompanying Map of Macquarie Harbour, and the country round it, I must explain that it does not purpose to represent in detail their geological stmcture, but only to .express broadly the area which is occupied by the various formations; and that the remarks which follow are of a general character, and not intended to enter into minutire, which could only be supplied by a much longer and more detailed sur:vey than I have been able to effect. My conception of the general structure of that country is derived from an examination of the north shore of Macquarie Harbour, and the course of the Gordon River for thirty miles from its mouth; a short distance of the courses of the Kings and the Franklin Rivers, and the line of country between the Eldon Ranges an.cl the West Coast. Throughout this area, the upper Palreozoic and Trappean formations, so largely developed i~ the settled portions of the Colony, are entirely absent; there being nothing intervening between rocks, which I shall show to be of Silurian age, and others of late Tertiary. There are several marked divisions of the Silurian rocks, but their exact sequence has not yet been determined ; since a series of anticlinal axes, coursing· to the west of north and east of south, cause a repetition of the same members of the formation in parallel zones, and the existence1 of .accompanying subordinate contortions, conjointly with the absence of sections, render thefr relation ,extremely obscure. The most prominent sub-formation consists of fossiliferous limestones, the entire ,thickness of which, is probably not less than one thousand feet. It is, in some cases, slightly argillaceous and thickly bedded; but ordinarily compact and massive. It is jointed in a variety of .directions, and the fissures thus produce<l have frequently been re-filled by calcareous spar of ,stalactitic origin. Irregular fissures or veins containing calcareous spar and quartz also ramify through it. These vary in thickness from a few inches or less to several feet, and proved, in some instanC'es, to contain galena or sulphuret of lead. The spots where this was the case are indicated on the n;iap. In the specimens obtained about four miles up the Franklin River traces of copper were also detected. The following are the observations which I made at .the last meeting of the Royal Society, with regard to the fossils contained in this limestone :-" In these rocks fossils are abundant; they are only conspicuous, however, in that portion of the beds exposed to the action of the running water. It is exceedingly difficult to ascertain their presence on a fractured surface, although they may be abundantly concealed in the specimens, and the ordinary atmospheric ag·encies appear to simply disintegrate the rock, without causing the specimen to be exposed in relief, as is the case with many of those upon the table. Hence it follows that the ground for collecting fossils is limited to the surface of the rocks between the level of the water and.about 30 feet above it,-the greatest height to which floods attain, as might be anticipated. The different beds or zones in the formation are not equally fossiliferous, nor do they 'contain identical species, one part being conspicuous for the abun­ dance of corals, another of univalve shells, &c., while a third is characterised by containing abundant fragments of large chambered orthocerata, &c., &c. I shall briefly enumerate a few of the most striking, characteristic, and best preserv.ed forms:- SP. Orthoceratites .•...•..•..• . • • • • • . • • . • .. .. • • . • • . • 2 Lituites ..•.••••••.....• .• • . •.. • • . • . • . • . I llalysites ••.•........• .• .., .• ~ . • . • • . • . • • • • . • . • • • . • l Favosites • • . • . • • . • • • • . • • . • . • • . • . • • • . • • . • . • 2 _Raphistoma.. • . • . • . • . • • l Orthis.. • • • . • . • . • • • • . • . • • . • . • . • I Rhynconella. • . • . • . • . • • • . • • • . • • • . • • • • • • • . I _Euomphalus ..••....•... , . • • • . • . • . • . • • . 2 _M_urchisonia ..••••....•........ _..................••.••......• , • . 3 4 The collective evidence of these fossils is unmistakeable,-they are all Silurian; and some of them, especially the Raphistoma and one species of Murchisonia, are Lower Silurian types. The lithological character, and associations of the strata, east and west (that is, across the strike) of this formation, is the only evidence of their age, (no fossils having yet been discovered in any other of the group of formations comprised in the Western Country, except the Silurian Mudstones, &c., of the Eldon. River.) There can, however, be little doubt that they are none of them later than Silurian, while some are evidently referable to the very earliest epochs." · These limestones appear to be identical with those at the Great Bend, and, according to some specimens brought from Point Hibbs by Mr. Bennett, with limestones existing there also. They occupy the course of the Gordon for about seven miles, and are then succeeded by sandstones and grits rising from below them, arching over an anticlinal axis, and then dipping again, so as to cause the re-commencement of the·limestone, at the junction of the Gordon and Franklin Rivers, the courses of both of which it occupies for about six or seven miles. The next division of importance is a coarse conglomerate, crmsisting of quartz pebbles, cemented by a siliceous matrix, which appears to be succeeded by siliceous grits, and a variety of sandstones, micaceous mudstones, purple grits, &c., streaked with quartz veins, and apparently passing down into clay slate, quartzite; and micaceous schists. The conglomerate forms the most conspicuous summits of the ranges, west of the King's River; and my impression is, that the white-topped rocky mountains running right down to the harbonr, as well as the Mount Direction range, and the range visible half way between Pyramid Island and the Frenchman's Cap will prove also to consist of it. As far as one can judge, this formation extends across. in descending order, from the ford at the King's Riv~r towards the Coast, the lower bed cropping in the course of the last seven miles of the. King's River. Mudstones, resembling closely in lithological character those of the Eldon Valley, crop out near the mouth of the Gordon ; while Head Quarter's. Island affords sections of rock which I considered, upon lithological ground, to be the equivalent of those at Fingal. Steel grey, and yellow clay. slates, resembling those of the Mersey District, occur both in. the King and the Gordon River, while a gradual passage into the metamorphic rock is presented by the granular quartzites and micaceous schists, existing on the western side of the Harbour, between Wellington Head and the Coast. If we regard the limestones as the highest member of the series (as I think we may),.itfollows. that the whole tract of country, with the exception- of that I shall mention hereafter, is occupied by Silurian or metamorphic formations; and that, in fact, the line of country between the Great Bend. of the Gordon and the West Coast, presents every member of the series, from,. perhaps Upper. Silurian, down to the metamorphic mica schists and quartzite,-which are repres011ted as forming, in great part, the range of the Frenchman's Cap. It is reasonable to anticipate that all, of this may be auriferous, although to what extent it is impossible t!_) say. It is probable that some divisions. of the formation may prove richer than others; and t\iat hence the more valuable tracts will be found-to lie in zones, running in accordance with the prev:alent strike in the direction from 20° to 30° W. of N., and E. of S. · · . I may point out that, in consequence of the structure of the Western Country, any mineral' discovery made in one part of it would almost equally affect the whole in this manner,-that,.as the outcrop of any particular set of beds which might prove to contain metal must extend in accordance. with the strike more or less to the north, and would probably be repeated in passing from eas of west by the series of parallel anticlinals which affects the country, a series of metalliferous bands or zones of country would thus be found to exist running along. its. entire length. I feel no hesitation in stating my opinion of the importance of continuing, as uninterruptedly as the seasons will permit, the Geological Survey of this portion of the Colony. Without a continuous survey of that chara~ter, vague supposition must always supercede authentic information, and the development of. what migl1t possibly prove to be the most valuable portion of the Island, be left to the. chance discoveries of casual investigation in place of the more certain experience of well-directed research. It is possible that the hopeful anticipations with regard to it may not be realised; but surely it is at leas,t well to know what is the stru.cture, character, and value of a district constituting a very large portion of the Colony, which is at present almost as much a terra incognita as if it wel'e situated at the south pole. The Tertiary deposits to which I have referred are principally developed on the north shore of the harbour, and for some miles up the Gordon· River, forming cliffs at many points of seventy or eighty feet in height, consisting of coarse sand rock, and shales, largely impressed with leaves of existing plants and containing occasional thin seams of lignite; which have been the origin of reports of the existence· of coal• there. · · Raised beaches of loose quartz pebbles surmount them, and form elevated plateaus of marsh land on the southern as well as upon the northern side of the harbour.

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